In mathematics, the Jack function is a generalization of the Jack polynomial, introduced by Henry Jack. The Jack polynomial is a homogeneous, symmetric polynomial which generalizes the Schur and zonal polynomials, and is in turn generalized by the Heckman–Opdam polynomials and Macdonald polynomials.
Definition
The Jack function
of an integer partition
, parameter
, and arguments
can be recursively defined as
follows:
- For m=1

- For m>1

where the summation is over all partitions
such that the skew partition
is a horizontal strip, namely
(
must be zero or otherwise
) and

where
equals
if
and
otherwise. The expressions
and
refer to the conjugate partitions of
and
, respectively. The notation
means that the product is taken over all coordinates
of boxes in the Young diagram of the partition
.
In 1997, F. Knop and S. Sahi gave a purely combinatorial formula for the Jack polynomials
in n variables:

The sum is taken over all admissible tableaux of shape
and

with

An admissible tableau of shape
is a filling of the Young diagram
with numbers 1,2,…,n such that for any box (i,j) in the tableau,
whenever 
whenever
and 
A box
is critical for the tableau T if
and
This result can be seen as a special case of the more general combinatorial formula for Macdonald polynomials.
C normalization
The Jack functions form an orthogonal basis in a space of symmetric polynomials, with inner product:
![{\displaystyle \langle f,g\rangle =\int _{[0,2\pi ]^{n}}f\left(e^{i\theta _{1}},\ldots ,e^{i\theta _{n}}\right){\overline {g\left(e^{i\theta _{1}},\ldots ,e^{i\theta _{n}}\right)}}\prod _{1\leq j<k\leq n}\left|e^{i\theta _{j}}-e^{i\theta _{k}}\right|^{\frac {2}{\alpha }}d\theta _{1}\cdots d\theta _{n}}](./ca582e0a32a9dc292850e71c6dd10422a1cc0029.svg)
This orthogonality property is unaffected by normalization. The normalization defined above is typically referred to as the J normalization. The C normalization is defined as

where

For
is often denoted by
and called the Zonal polynomial.
P normalization
The P normalization is given by the identity
, where

where
and
denotes the arm and leg length respectively. Therefore, for
is the usual Schur function.
Similar to Schur polynomials,
can be expressed as a sum over Young tableaux. However, one need to add an extra weight to each tableau that depends on the parameter
.
Thus, a formula for the Jack function
is given by

where the sum is taken over all tableaux of shape
, and
denotes the entry in box s of T.
The weight
can be defined in the following fashion: Each tableau T of shape
can be interpreted as a sequence of partitions

where
defines the skew shape with content i in T. Then

where

and the product is taken only over all boxes s in
such that s has a box from
in the same row, but not in the same column.
Connection with the Schur polynomial
When
the Jack function is a scalar multiple of the Schur polynomial

where

is the product of all hook lengths of
.
Properties
If the partition has more parts than the number of variables, then the Jack function is 0:

Matrix argument
In some texts, especially in random matrix theory, authors have found it more convenient to use a matrix argument in the Jack function. The connection is simple. If
is a matrix with eigenvalues
, then

References
- Demmel, James; Koev, Plamen (2006), "Accurate and efficient evaluation of Schur and Jack functions", Mathematics of Computation, 75 (253): 223–239, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.134.5248, doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-05-01780-1, MR 2176397.
- Jack, Henry (1970–1971), "A class of symmetric polynomials with a parameter", Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Section A. Mathematics, 69: 1–18, MR 0289462.
- Knop, Friedrich; Sahi, Siddhartha (19 March 1997), "A recursion and a combinatorial formula for Jack polynomials", Inventiones Mathematicae, 128 (1): 9–22, arXiv:q-alg/9610016, Bibcode:1997InMat.128....9K, doi:10.1007/s002220050134, S2CID 7188322
- Macdonald, I. G. (1995), Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials, Oxford Mathematical Monographs (2nd ed.), New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-853489-1, MR 1354144
- Stanley, Richard P. (1989), "Some combinatorial properties of Jack symmetric functions", Advances in Mathematics, 77 (1): 76–115, doi:10.1016/0001-8708(89)90015-7, MR 1014073.
External links